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Signs lay in the trash during a protest against the Trump administration’s policy on separating immigrant families at Lafayette Square in Washington, D.C., U.S. (Photographer: Toya Sarno Jordan/Bloomberg)

(Bloomberg) -- Immigrant fathers formerly separated from their sons are on a hunger strike at a Texas detention center, advocates said, apparently to seek release from government custody and authorization to remain in the U.S.

The hunger and activity strike at an Immigration and Customs Enforcement facility near San Antonio started on Wednesday, and more families joined on Thursday, according to the Refugee and Immigrant Center for Education and Legal Services, a local advocacy group which has been in contact with dozens of detainees there in recent days.

Leticia Zamarripa, a spokeswoman for ICE, disputed the account, saying a group of fewer than 50 fathers and children staged a “brief sit-in” on Thursday but “there has been no mass protest or hunger strike.” Zamarripa said in an emailed statement that the protesters dispersed after an ICE supervisor explained immigration processes to address concerns they had raised about their cases.

But Jennifer Falcon, communications director for the immigrant advocacy group, said about 300 men and 300 boys are participating in an ongoing protest, with adults not eating or drinking and children declining to participate in school activities. Zamarripa said the facility’s school has had “no unusual absences.”

Conditions at the facility couldn’t be independently verified because ICE hasn’t granted the media access to the facility.

Separated Fathers

The immigrant advocacy group distributed a letter it said was written by a father identified only as Jorge held at the facility.

“We are desperate, we are tired of being incarcerated and we want to be released with our sons,” Jorge wrote in the letter, dated July 31. He said he wrote “to let the media know the unfairness we separated fathers are going through.”

The families are among more than 2,500 that were separated earlier this year after illegally crossing the U.S. border with Mexico under the Trump administration’s “zero tolerance” immigration enforcement policy. Under pressure, President Donald Trump ended the family separation program with a mid-June executive order.

The men on the hunger strike are asking to be released with their children and allowed to stay in the U.S. The families “do not deserve to be deported” after their “suffering,” Jorge wrote in the letter.

The hunger strikers are being held at Karnes County Residential Center, one of ICE’s three family detention facilities. It’s run by the GEO Group, an operator of private corrections and detention facilities in the U.S. and other countries.

‘No Rhyme or Reason’

Advocates for the detainees said they don’t know why families are being held at Karnes while others have been released. “There seems to be no rhyme or reason as to why these people were detained and others were released,” said Manoj Govindaiah, the group’s director of family detention services.

At least some of the detainees signed English-language documents agreeing to be deported. They’ve since told attorneys that they thought the documents were to gain the return of their children, Falcon said.

These and other reunified families haven’t been deported because of a July 16 order from U.S. District Judge Dana Sabraw pausing the deportations of recently reunified families, amid concerns from the American Civil Liberties Union that parents signed deportation agreements they didn’t understand.

A nearby ICE facility that the advocacy group estimated is holding about 100 reunified women and their children, the South Texas Family Residential Center in Dilley, is also facing increased scrutiny. An immigration lawyers group said on Wednesday that a young child allegedly died shortly after release from the center.

Gregory Chen, director of government relations at the American Immigration Lawyers Association, said the group had confirmed that a toddler died soon after being released from government custody in the Dilley center, but had no other information about the child.